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tv   ABC World News Now  ABC  June 25, 2013 1:40am-4:01am PDT

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charged. if he is charged. here we go, it would be assault with intent to commit great bodily harm. that's a serious charge. >> no doubt. >> the claim is the guy had his head bashed on the concrete. he was bleeding. he needed stitches. so a big deal here. so moving on to a miraculous game, the stanley cup playoffs. late in the third period. chicago scored to tight game up. >> just 17 second later the blackhawks scored again. and held on to win. 3-2. that means the stanley cup is theirs for the second time in four seasons. >> thousand of blackhawks fans poured into the streets of chicago to celebrate. a chance to honor their team with a public celebration later in the week. >> wow. >> i was so into hockey as a kid, i'm telling you what. bruins/blackhawks. classic stuff. >> boston deserved the win. >> chicago won. the chicago is the blackhawks. >> boston deserved the win. >> there you go. >> boston deserved the win. >> deserved the win. but they were close. they were there.
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could you imagine? they were going to win. they were right there. >> you're right about that. >> sorry, chicago, but boston deserved that one. coming up -- trendy food trucks. you see them everywhere. not just for people any more. >> shopping for a baby with royal flare, duchess catherine hitting the stores before her big due date. the world watches her every move. you are watching "world news now." ♪ baby baby baby ooh ♪ thought you'd always be mine mine ♪ >> announcer: "world news now" weather brought to you by hotwire.com. >> announcer: "world news now" weather brought to you by hotwire.com. nteded to take a relalaxing trip to florida... you knknow, just to unwind. but we can only afford e trip this year, and his high school reunion is coming up in seattle. evereryone's going. we couould actually affordto ta. see, when really nice hotel, so we gogot our four-star hotels for r half price. i shouldld have been voted st likely to travel. ♪ h-o-t-w-i-r-e... ♪ hotwire.com
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>> that's awesome. >> our poor director -- all right. we've all felt a burst of anger at another driver cutting us off on the highway. >> yes, we sure have. more and more the angry moments are becoming violent. road rage is on the rise. abc's geobenitez looks at how to avoid a high-speed confrontation. >> run me off the road! >> reporter: a fight that end with gunshots all because this man driving his family on the north carolina road says two young men cut him off. an extreme example of road rage. just last week, a bruising brawl at a california intersection between a lawyer and a retired police officer. aggressive drivers are a growing
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threat on the roads. in fact, the most recent study from the u.s. department of transportation attributes more than a thousand deaths to road rage, up 170%. let's go for a ride, doctor. psychologist dr. ryan fuller says cars become weapons in the hand of stressed drivers. what's the mindset of someone who's just really angry on the road? >> now they perceive someone cutting them off just gone one step too far. >> reporter: watch this just days ago. a driver on a los angeles highway cut off another driver. threw a can at him and got out of his car to yell. so what do you do if attacked? dr. fuller says, first keep your cool. >> you want to take a few deep breaths. slow things down. >> reporter: most importantly he says, don't make eye contact because that can be interpreted as a challenge. >> reporter: sometimes we have seen people get out of the car
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and start yelling. is that something they should do? >> best thing they can do is stay in their car under any circumstances. [ bleep ], [ bleep ]. >> reporter: like this man ignoring the angry marine ranting outside his window. just keeping his eye on the road. >> whoa, whoa. >> turned into an animal. >> hard to watch that. >> ah! >> my goodness. you want to play that back and say you look like an idiot. calm down. >> i run hot though. i totally understand. >> that's it! >> ah! i get it. >> me too, i get it. i don't think i have ever kicked anybody's door. >> yeah, you don't do that. up next, the style fit for a royal. >> duchess kate busy buying cute little things for her new baby. we're going to show you what the heir to the british thorn -- throne will have in his or her nursery. coming up -- excuse me -- in our next half hour, sneaking out of the zoo, the
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all-points-bulletin for a red panda.
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♪ baby baby ooh when you have a baby, the only thing more fun than buying teeny-weeny baby clothes is decorating the nursery. >> that's what duchess kate has been spending the final weeks of her presidency. a tickle in my throat. pregnancy doing. abc's amy robach tells us why the stylish kate is setting some new trends. >> reporter: while dad-to-be prince william spent the weekend attending a wedding with harry, his wife, eight-months' pregnant kate was at home getting ready for the birth of the latest heir to the throne due in july. she made her last prebaby presence last saturday.
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many wonder what the littlest royal's nursery will look like. >> kate's decorating style is actually very similar to her dressing style. she likes very classic, very clean lines, very simple things, very elegant. >> reporter: kate is reportedly preparing two nurseries, one at kensington palace and another at her parents' estate in the small english community of buckleberry where the duchess is expected to spend time with her mother carol following the baby's birth. the items will include a moses basket for the baby, similar to this one, retailing for $500. kate and her mother were seen loading one into a car. and kate has been seen shopping for throw pillows, rugs, and drapes in herringbone brown. while purchasing upscale items don't expect her to go crazy investing in ostentatious baby blink on the market like this crystal tub. >> we know she haggled for antiques and visits outlet
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store. >> reporter: a modern invest in, a buggy. this bug-a d boo chameleon stroller with blue with stylish stripes, kidded a unisex design perfect for kate who opted not to find out the baby gender in advance. managers at giggle, the baby store to the stars, say they expect what they're now calling the kate stroller to sell out quickly. >> the products she picks, the colors for the nursery will be hot ticket items. >> reporter: moms we spoke with agreed. >> she's got fantastic taste. she's dressed so well throughout the pregnancy. >> i think everybody will just be looking to see what the baby is going to get. i will for sure. >> reporter: amy robach, abc news, new york. >> can we talk how she is eight months' pregnant and looks like four months' pregnant. >> looks like a baby bump. doesn't look like boom. is it the clothing or not
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showing much? >> she has the best stylist in the world if it is the clothing. she looks amazing. those nurseries will be amazing too. >> nothing wrong with looking big. a-- those nurseries will be amazing too. and remove some waste. ctually gels to trap and that gelling also helps to lower some cholesterol. it even traps some carbs to help maintain healthy blood sugar levels as part of your diet. now that's one super hard working fiber. metamucil. 3 amazing benefits in 1 super fiber. ♪
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welcome to "the mix," everybody. yesterday we were telling you about the stunt of a daredevil, nik wallenda walking across the grand canyon. today we're telling you about an incredible magic trick by illusionist dynamo from london. this guy levitated off of the ground. not just for a few second. check hem out. there he is on the outside of a double-decker bus in london, nothing under his feet. all he has got to hold onto, the palm of his hand on top of the bus. as he gets a police escort through -- >> how is he doing that? >> he levitated next to the bus. he, there he was. >> an illusion. sure looks like he is floating. >> incredible. he pretty much did float.
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he did this as he crossed the westminster bridge. he had a police escort. teamed up with pepsi. couple pepsi ads. he has his own television show in london. people get to see all kinds of fun stuff he does on the television show, but there were people on the bus got to see it firsthand. they say it was one of those had-to-see-it-to-believe-it moments. oo nothing under his feet. no strings attached. no platform anywhere. just a really amazing illusionist. what highs doing? >> i don't know. >> i want to know the answer. >> food trucks all over new york city. love food trucks. a food truck now for dogs doing well in chicago. a bit of a trend. gourmet exotic food truck. fido to go. it is called. she opened this up. she has 40 applicants who want to license the brand. she makes cookies and frozen yogurt cups she sells in her commercial kitchen in downtown chicago.
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she has to explain to a lot of people who want to buy a frozen yogurt for themselves. it is not sweetened. i have a hunch you might not like it. it is for your dog. there you go. pretty cool. >> cute. >> ridiculous. >> fido. >> it pleases me so much to see my dog eating something he loves. >> so cool. now to boulder. there has been a kidnapping. a stuffed bear was kidnapped from outside a store. taken to a nearby campsite. taken to a nearby campsite. then gifted to another set of campers. well, police on the hunt for the guy checked out craigslist, found out somebody posted him on craigslist. contacted the guys. went out and reached out to them. and they got the bear back. the winner here, though, is the official police report. which says -- the bear does not appear to have been injured. although he was missing his fishing vest when police found him. the bear has not shared any information about what happened to him during the incident.
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this morning on "world news now" -- spy drama. the american accused of exposing american secrets who spent another night in russia. what's next for edward snowden who tried to flee justice. and adding up, the powerful storms, floods, and fires, the cost of all this damage and why it's expected to get so much worse, leaving destruction across a wide area of the country. sneaking out the red panda that escaped from the national zoo, the search, how social media got involved. and who found this clever little animal. and in stitches. jimmy kimmel's injury and explanation leaves his late night talk show audience laughing with him. that's coming up in "the skinny" on this tuesday, june 25th. >> announcer: from abc news, this is "world news now" with john muller and diana perez. all right. we begin this half hour with the
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increasingly urgent search for edward snowden. sources tell abc news that there is growing consensus that snowden is in a position to deal a potentially devastating blow to u.s. national security. >> but where is he? with the latest on the deepening mystery here is our chief investigative correspondent brian ross. >> reporter: high drama and international intrigue at the moscow airport, reminiscent of a cold war spy novel. at the center of it all, 30-year-old edward snowden, a contract employee at the cia and nsa, national security agency. under indictment for espionage. and on the run from the fbi, with four laptops loaded with america's most sensitive secrets. russia is refusing to arrest snowden. >> it would be very disappointing if he was willfully allowed to board an airplane as a result, and there would be, without any question, some effect, impact on the relationship and consequences.
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>> reporter: snowden had been scheduled to fly to havana on flight 150 of the russian airline aeroflot. his assigned seat in economy class, 17-a was empty as the plane pulled away from the gate after he checked in. snowden is trying to make his way from russia to cuba and then to ecuador for political asylum. countries only too happy to defy the u.s. ecuador's embassy in london already serves as a safe haven for another u.s. target. wikileaks founder julian assange who by found said his group helped arrange for snowden's escape. >> edward snowden is not a traitor, he's not a spy. >> reporter: snowden was able to flee his hideout in hong kong after a final dinner of pizza and fried chicken because of help from officials there who first delayed acting on the formal u.s. request for his arrest, claiming the paperwork was not in order and then failed to tell american officials that
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snowden was on the move. >> then he will be given free passage, okay? uninterrupted passage via the airport to any other place of his choice. >> reporter: snowden was able to fly out of hong kong for moscow though his passport had been revoked by the u.s. the day before. officials in hong kong say washington failed to revoke snowden's passport in time coming eight days after criminal charges were filed. at the white house, press secretary jay carney said the u.s. is not buying that excuse. brian ross, abc news, new york. more witnesses expected to testify this morning after explosive opening statements in the george zimmerman trial. the former neighborhood watch volunteer is accused of shooting unarmed teenager trayvon martin in sanford, florida. the first words jurors heard from the prosecutor were quoting zimmerman's call to 911. >> [ bleep ] punks, these [ bleep ] they always get away. those were the words in that grown man's mouth. as he followed in the dark a
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17-year-old boy who he didn't know. >> among the first witnesses to be called was emergency dispatcher who took that call from zimmerman. this is an emotional trial. i mean trayvon martin's mom walked out during that 911 call. and it's only expected to get worse for her because while the prosecution is saying that it's zimmerman screaming f, the defee is saying zimmerman is the one screaming for help in the 911 call. the defense is saying that's trayvon martin screaming for his life. >> they'll let the jury decide for themselves. not going to allow voice analysts comment on that. very interesting in the opening statements. just, you know. >> bizarre. >> bizarre in both cases. clearly the defense's opening statement with the knock-knock joke just did not go over. >> really didn't. the knock-knock joke in case you haven't heard was knock-knock, who is there, george zimmerman,
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george zimmerman who? that's why you're on the jury. >> everybody, the six women sitting on the jury. >> saying you are on the jury you don't know who george zimmerman is that's why we want you on a jury. a bizarre way to open any kind of -- >> if you are trying to bond -- >> that's right. that's what the opening statement is, trying to bond. create a timeline, what we will do, what we will show you, the evidence to prove to you we are right they're wrong. not the way to do that. don't start with a joke. we'll see. it's just the beginning. >> yes, you're report. all right. let's talk about two coal miners who were injured. they had to be rescued after an underground collapse in western pennsylvania. the workers hit by a section of rock that fell off from a ceiling of the mine. about 400 feet down. this all took place. emergency crews took about an hour to bring the miners to the surface. they were both alert and conscious. they're expected to be okay. well, there's more of a tragic end there to a grain elevator accident in indiana. a worker killed when the elevator exploded 50 miles southeast of chicago. the blast so powerful it shook homes nearby. the man believed to be loading grain from the top of the
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elevator when the explosion knocked him off the edge. investigators still trying to determine the cause. how about this? a massachusetts family shaken up but okay after a bus crashes into the kitchen of their home. the impact knowledged that house seven feet off its foundation. the bus driver was seriously injured in the accident. he was trapped for more than an hour. police in auburn speculate he may have had a medical problem which caused him to lose control of the bus. and it wasn't the greatest start from a flight that was supposed to be from reagan national airport outside washington to minneapolis. the delta jet veered off the runway and got stuck in a foot of mud. 160 passengers were safely taken off the plane. buses took them to a terminal. and another flight where they were able to board hours later. a major thunderstorm in central new hampshire sparked a lightning strike on a boy scout camp, sending two dozen scouts to the hospital.
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no one was hit directly by the lightning. paramedics say everyone was taking shelter under a canopy which was hit by the bolt of lightning traveling along a piece of metal. 23 scouts, three adults hospitalized with burns none life threatening. joo lightning . lightning also being blamed for sparking a growing wildfire burning in colorado. we have been reporting on t wild weather across the nation for weeks. as abc's clayton sandel reports, it has been a costly year when it comes to damage done by acts of nature. >> reporter: this tornado spotted near dix, nebraska, just part of a weather juggernaut in the plains and midwest. in minnesota, 50 mile an hour wind flipped big rigs and were powerful enough to destroy a trailer in south dakota killing a woman inside. in boscoville, wisconsin, 8 inches of rain flooded half the town as wildfires continue ravaging the west. there is not enough rain. thousands of firefighters plus a fleet of aircraft adding to the growing cost of weather disasters. in 1980, $58 billion. by last year, extreme weather climate costs nearly doubled to $110 billion. 377 people were killed. hurricane sandy's tab, $65 billion.
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drought and heat waves, another $30 billion. the cost of fighting the black forest fire here in colorado has already topped $10 million. and that doesn't even count more than 500 homes that burned to the ground. scientists say human caused climate change is already helping shift the planet's natural balance, creating more heat waves, drought, and intense downpours. a stormy and expensive reality that's already on our doorstops. clayton sandel, abc news, colorado springs. checking the weather maps now, it looks like a lot of yesterday actually to be honest. more storms from the northern plains to the midwest and great lakes region. rain for parts of the northeast. afternoon thunderstorms from the deep south off to the mid-atlantic. showers in the pacific northwest. >> upper 60s, mid-70s along the west coast. 88 in miami, atlanta, chicago. some nice weather to recover from the stanley cup celebration. all right. we have some congratulations to hand out this morning all because of this. hang on.
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pretty cool. that is a small rocket built by three students from georgetown, texas. the flight took part as a competition in the annual air show in paris, france. >> inside that rocket was a raw egg. the idea behind the competition was to have the rocket soar 750 feet into the aur and then float back to the ground, all of this without the egg being damaged. well, that's exactly what happened, which was enough for kids from texas to win the entire competition. congratulations to them. >> pretty amazing. that is a soft little landing. isn't it? >> that is. >> i want to say their names -- it's pretty cool -- brothers mark and matthew janecka and daniel kelton, are the ones responsible for the rocket who won. [ rocket whistling ] >> no kaboom. there's no kaboom necessary because the egg made it all the way without kabooming. when i was a sophomore in high school, we had to be responsible for an egg, our child for all of
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a week. out of the 100 kids maybe two eggs survived. >> had to care for an egg. >> care for an egg. decorate it. make it like a child. we really thought it was a person. >> oh, interesting. >> yours broke? >> yes, halfway through. although my high school teacher doesn't know that. >> you're not going to share how it broke? you replaced it with another egg? wow. wow, perez, that is sneaky. >> it happens all the time. it has to happen all the time. i know i'm not the only one who did this. coming up, how jimmy kimmel got his audience laughling after a painful injury. wait till you see this one. stacy keibler, sizzling good looks. can you look this hot by following her diet routine? we'll tell you all about it. you're watching "world news now." ♪ doesn't mean i'm lonely when i'm alone ♪ ♪ what doesn't kill you makes you brighter ♪ >> announcer: "world news now" weather brought to you by colonial penn life insurance. weather brought to you by colonial penn life insurance. >> announcer: "world news now" brought to you by colonial penn life insurance.
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♪ baby we were born to run a high-profile breakout in washington, d.c., had an entire neighborhood on the lookout. residents armed with their iphones. >> rare red panda, not the giant one, red panda escaped from the zoo. and spent the day on the lam. that is why -- this is our "favorite story of the day." and thanks to social media he is back where he belongs. here's abc's david kerley. >> reporter: look fast and meet rusty, the fury fugitive which had the nation's capitol all
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a-twitter. before noon, the country's national zoo tweets out. we are looking for a missing red panda. wanted the less than-year-old red panda who arrived from a nebraska zoo and only one on display, three weeks ago. officials aren't sure if he was kidnapped or escaped. >> their inclination is to go up high into a tree. >> reporter: zoo officials thought rusty was still on zoo grounds. >> they're looking for him in the trees. >> good place to look. >> he is missing. is that what happened last night? >> yeah. >> reporter: with the search on. rusty becomes a social media darling. #rusty, #findrusty. >> do they look like pandas to you? >> no. they look like a red raccoon. >> reporter: smart kid. red began red pandas only share a name with giant pandas which are bears. red panda is related to raccoon, skunks and weasels. less than two hours after the first tweet, look who is spotted in someone's yard with the tweet, red panda in our neighborhood. zoo workers rush to the scene and high fives as rusty is returned to captivity.
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and then in a secret service kind of way -- >> hey, guys, excuse us. >> reporter: -- he is whisked way. this must be washington. david kerley, abc news, washington. >> in a white unmarked van. >> the perfect name for rusty, don't you think, his color looks rusty. i happen to think he looks like a fox. >> looks foxy, raccoony, not panda-y. now we know. they're not bears. >> oh. here is something interesting for you all-knowing viewers, discovered in the late 1800s. >> by europeans. >> of course. >> the people in the himalayas knew all about them for thousands of years. but they were discovered in the 1800s, by europeans. >> that's when we figured them out. a full 50 years before the giant black-and-white pandas. >> i'm sure the chinese knew the giant black-and-white pandas lived in their area before europeans discovered it. >> i think you're right. >> i like how we take responsibility.
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well they were discovered. they only came into existence in the early 1800s. >> exactly right. coming up -- separating fact from fiction. we will do that for you when it comes to kim kardashian and
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♪ skinny so skinny ♪ all right. jimmy kimmel, sporting a big old shiner. >> it looked pretty bad. >> you'd almost think it was a joke it was so convincing
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looking, but it was very real. take a look. we'll show you a picture if we have it. is that it? >> you can barely see it. >> see it better when he does his stand-up act. apparently went out for food with his fiance. wasn't like he got in a fight. with a bikers' gang, or anything. went to pay a parking meter. opened the door on his face. he explained the whole thing. get a listen. >> i actually put together a re-enactment of this. i will show you what happened. i was going to open the door to get quarters out of the coin thing to feed the meter, but instead i got a little distracted. instead hit myself in the cheekbone. with the corner of the door. i learned an important lesson. that lesson is car doors open outwards. >> who knew? >> who knew? unless, of course, there is anotherstair. that is just such a perfect black eye. i have to think, well. >> somebody else would have the story.
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you know? if it is jimmy kimmel sporting a shiner and they're the one that gave it to them. i have a funny feeling there is another one out there. don't you think? if it really wasn't a car door. >> makes you wonder. i love it. he cast his own likeness with the buff body. that's great. when they make a movie about me, they'll never make, i want to have somebody who is -- >> buff. >> of course. >> buff. muscular. moving on, kimye, there are reports out there, atrib puts this to britain's "sun" picked up by "the daily beast." apparently kanye west popped the question to baby mama, kim kardashian. happened a couple days after they had their baby, north west. and the report goes on, this was with an engagement ring, rare black diamond, cost him $1 million. wow. but there is a lot of other reports out there that say that is simply not true. perez hilton, "people" magazine both saying, nice try, likely story, just not a real story. >> here's a goofy question. is black diamond black or is it just called a black diamond? >> i don't know. no idea. >> didn't mean to put you on the
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spot. >> i don't know much about rare diamonds. i know the white pretty ones. >> i know they cost a lot. >> clear pretty ones. amy winehouse, her brother claims she died not from drugs and alcohol. he believes in his heart that she died from bulimia. he says his sister was killed by bulimia. he says drug and alcohol abuse would have eventually killed his sister. she died in 2011, of course. he says the eating disorder bulimia made her body weak and susceptible. all her friends were doing it. they stopped. amy never really stopped. >> she did get really thin. >> you know, he might have something there. >> bulimia. he admits that the drugs and alcohol would get her in the end. he thinks bulimia is what got her in the short run. >> 27-year-old. we're talking bieber in the news. he's been banned for life from las vegas indoor skydiving, bad behavior, and failure to pay. $1,600. got there before they closed. there with six other people. hey, i will pay when we're done.
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never paid. had a bad attitude. the place said, never again. you are out. >> black diamond. in fact they're black. >> this just in -- 4 it's happening now.
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so ditch your dishcloth and switch to new bounty duratowel. the durable, cloth-like picker-upper. >> announcer: yahoo! news together now with abc news it's time to see the whole picture. ♪ what doesn't kill you makes >> announcer: yahoo! news together now with abc news it's time to see the whole picture. ♪ what doesn't kill you makes you stronger stand a little taller ♪ ♪ doesn't mean i'm lonely so we all know this, especially on this shift, staying in shape is tough, really tough, especially for us. the most successful plans involve diet, exercise, and the ever elusive sleep. >> what are those three things -- diet, exercise, sleep. i have no idea. one famous face going further there, george clooney's gorgeous girlfriend, stacy keibler
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revealing her fitness regime. linzie janis tells us what it is about. >> reporter: she is famous for her skyscraper legs, her dance moves and her beau, george clooney. and now stacy keibler is sharing the secrets behind that fabulous figure. >> i believe you are what you eat, so i try to eat a lot of organic vegetables and fruits. >> reporter: the former "dancing with the stars" contestant is new beauty magazine's latest inside she's revealing her health regime and a super strict diet called the clean cleanse, saying my life changed when i did the 21-day clean program. i eliminated sugar, fruit, beans, corn, and gluten. and looked at it like an experiment with my body. >> reporter: it sounds really extreme. >> it is absolutely extreme. i do really like she has dramatically reduced the amount of sugar in her overall diet and >> reporter: but what else goes
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into keebler's glamorous glow? >> my fitness tip is to try to sweat every single day. e se >> reporte the endi ready, cellulite-busting body brushing. >> i just started getting into lymphatic brushing really great to get your cells moving, and lymphatic system moving. you've will see a difference. >> reporter: stacy is just open she really is a likeable, warm, genuine person. >> reporter: top tips from the beauty who managed to snag one of holywooand linzie janibnew york. >> or yould j diana perez and do d eat turnovers and cinnabons and what you eat and not gain a pound. >> it's going to catch up with me. i know it is. >> it should have caught up with you by now. you're home free. have the donut for me this morning. >> hey. >> that's interesting. >> hey, look at george clo
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good morning. i'm john muller. >> and i'm diana perez. here are some of the top stories we're following this morning on "world news now." u.s. officials are increasingly worried about the damage that former nsa analyst edward snowden could do to national security. snowden's whereabouts are a mystery this morning after he failed to make a flight from moscow to cuba. opposing lawyers paint vastly different pictures of florida gunman george zimmerman during opening statements. zimmerman is expected to take the stand in his own defense. testimony resuming this morning. anxiety is growing across south africa this morning as nelson mandela remains in critical condition. his ex-wife winnie mandela, their daughter, and family members have been spotted coming and going from the hospital in pretoria.
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and the chicago blackhawks, the new stanley cup champions, turn a 2-1 deficit into a 3-2 cup-clinching victory last night. two goals in 17 seconds. the celebration from chicago coming up. those are our top stories on this tuesday, june 25th. >> announcer: from abc news, this is "world news now" with john muller and diana perez. what a game. what a game. what a game. >> yeah. how about that? the chicago blackhawks. >> i said the boston bruins deserve to win. you don't think i should have used that word. did you see the final? >> to be honest, i didn't see a play of last night's game. >> 17 seconds. they scored. they scored not only the winning goal the one right before it. that was it. the game was over. >> saying they collapsed. it was snatched from them. >> the blackhawks were so quick. the bruins didn't know what hit them.
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>> boston fans must be stunned. >> i know they are. they thought they won the game. >> awful. unless you are a chicago fan. awesome. >> unless you live in chicago. good morning, chicago. >> yep. okay. let's get to the news of the morning. we're beginning this half hour with severe weather in new england and the lightning strike attaboy scout camp. >> yeah. that strike in central new hampshire sent more than two dozen people to the hospital, including scouts as young as 13 years old. it happened during a major storm outside of belmont, the lightning strike at campbell, no lightning strike at camp bell, no one was hit directly by the lightning everyone was huddled e could have hit the ground and traveled through the tent. it could have been anchored by a rope onto a tree. it could have traveled. so many different ways when you get lightning strikes things can travel. >> reporter: 23 scouts and three adults were hospitalized. six scouts s life-threatening injuries. severe weather also pounding the
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nation's midsection. in illinois, high wind and toro cf heavy rains flooded parts of ssterdian and hundreds of people are still cleepg up from flooding in southwestern wisconsin. >> there are a lot of roads that were washed out. seeing a lot of bridges damaged that are impassible. just culverts and tubes that are washed out. now people are moving forward, trying to get their houses liveable again. >> damage estimates in the town of boscoville are topping $3 million and more severe weather expected across the plain states and upper midwesoday >> wow. some video, right? let's check out the forecast maps. more violent storms in the midwest. late-day thunderstorms in the southeast, to the mid-atlantic. showers in the northwest. another hot sunny day for the southwest and the rockies. >> 93, popular number on the map. hello, baltimore, boston, omaha and albuquerque. along the west coast, readings range from the high 60s to the mid-70s. a giant wildfire in the mountains of southwestern
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colorado is now spreading. but a break in the wind today could be a big help for fire crews. the fire more than doubled in size over the weekend. it has burned at least 117 square miles and firefighters square miles and firefighters that's when the summer rainy season begins. all right. the taliban claiming responsibility for an attack on one of the most secure places in afhani a series of explosions rocked the gates to the presidential palace in kabul. the taliban sent a text message statement saying, we brought death to the enemy. the area is also home to the u.s. embassy and headquarters nation the immigration bill offering a path to citizenship for millions of undocumented immigrants has cleared a critical hurdle in the senate. 67 senators voted in favor of the provision. it calls for nearly $40 billion to improve border security. the complete bill could get senate approval before the july fourth recess. it faces a tough battle in the house. and the nation's highest court sidestepped a decision on affirmative action at issue whether race should play a role in college admissions.
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here's abc's terry moran. >> reporter: it all came down to one student, one young woman who didn't get into the college sunny wanted and decided to fight back. in 2008 app gail fisher was rejected by the university of texas even though some students with lower test scores and grades got in ahead of her. five of the students were black. 42 were white. but fisher and her lawyers argued she was blocked because she was white, and they sued. the supreme court sent the case back to the lower courts for more careful scrutiny of the university's policy, thus postponing the real day of reckoning for affirmative action. justice anthony kennedy writing for an unusual 7-1 majority did raise the bar for schools, ruling that any racial preference policies must be a last resort and university officials must prove there are no workable race neutral alternative to achieving a diverse student population. abigail fisher declared victory. >> they gave us everything that we asked for.
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and i'm very confident that u.t. won't be able to use race in the future. >> reporter: what does this mean? it means more lawsuits, probably, more abigail fishers. and college officials will have to scramble to show they're considering other factors about students, socioecomonic, family background, that kind of thing before they look at race. for those of us with kids applying to college this year, affirmative action is still in place. but there is no question this debate, this legal battle will continue and make it back here to the supreme court in the next few years. as for abigail fisher, she graduated from lsu this year. terry moran, abc news, the supreme court. it was four years ago today that michael jackson died. to mark the occasion, madame tussau tussauds' wax museum in london unveiled three figures depicting jackson in different stages.
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actors posed with the figures. the king of pop died after an overdose of the powerful anesthetic propofol. dr. conrad murray serving a four year sentence. one of apple's first computers will fetch top bid when it goes up for auction. this apple one personal computer was hand built back in 1976, a product of the garage-born business of steve jobs and steve wozniak. it was originally sold for 666.66 dollars. keyboard and monitor not included. it is now up for auction and it could go for a sweet $500,000. >> apple products started with that. can you imagine? >> does it really still work? >> does it work? >> that's the question. as the economy improves across the country, we are getting a look inside the american work place. the gallup organization asked 150,000 full time and part-time workers about their jobs and bosses. listen to this. 70% hate their job so much that incentives or extras cannot even help. 50% say they're disengaged and find no inspiration from their work or managers. 44% admit flex time, free
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lunches, and perks could improve their morale. >> wow. >> translation -- >> 7 out of 10. >> working for a living is tough. isn't that amazing? >> that is incredible. a lot surveyed, complained about bosses from hell. who ignored talent and didn't cultivate growth. and then there's just a general lack of morale. it makes it hard to come in if you don't like the people they work with and everybody is hum drum about what they're doing. a tough spot. when we were in our meeting this morning. i counted there were about 20 people in the meeting. i looked around. i said 14 of us hate what we are doing right now. >> you were looking at their faces going. he's hating it. he's hating. actually. i have a new producer, tony. he doesn't count. we know he loves his job. he just got here. this is a honeymoon for tony. everybody else we are sitting there going like this. >> good days, bad days. >> i love my job. >> me too. >> sure. >> doggonnit.
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all right. hang on tight for this one. we're taking a wild ride. a wild ride, that is, on the full throttle roller coaster as six flags park north of los angeles. >> oh, my goodness. this one said to be the tallest, fastest looping roller coaster. riders upside down twice. the loop is 160 feet off the ground at its highest point in order to get up and around the coaster goes from 0 to 70 miles an hour three times during one ride. one of those accelerations, ha-ha, happens to be backwards. >> looks like a good roller coaster. >> you go through a tunnel. >> i love roller coasters. i would do it over and over and over. >> classic. real coaster. >> go fast, go slow, go fast, go slow, then you go backwards. then you go upside down. that's -- that's dangerous. there's a lost people that aren't going to make it clean off that one. yeah. coming up -- huge celebrations in chicago after last night's amazing last-minute stanley cup win. it was amazing. also this morning, who is anticipating the comeback of the
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once lost hostess twinkie. the sweetest headline of the morning. keeping kids entertained and engaged on vacation. the must-have toys when your family hits the road. you're watching "world news now." ♪ seeing things i may never see again i can't wait to get on the road again ♪ >> announcer: "world news now" weather, brought to you by gerber life insurance. ne ghes.
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is a thing of the past. block the acid with prilosec otc, and don't get heartburn in the first place. [ male announcer ] one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn. [ male announcer ] one pill each morning. listen, your story line, it makes for incredible tv drama. thing is, your drug use is too adult for the kids, so i'm going to have to block you. oh, man. yeah. [inhales] well, have a good one. you're a nice lady. welcome back. okay. so if a hockey game was 58:44 long, stanley cup finals would be leading to ing heading to a . >> not so much. hockey games are 60 minutes. chicago blackhawks scored two goals in the final 1:16 of the
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game against the boston bruins. enough to win the blackhawks their second stanley cup in four seasons. congratulations to them. >> congratulations, blackhawks. it feels good to win. >> the stanley cup is like the coolest trophy in the whole world. >> then they bounce it around throughout the season, the year, so incredibly cool. >> you have to be incredibly strong to lift that thing. the dramatic win sent thousands of black hawk fans into the streets of chicago. they did keep it classy. no reports of any arrests or anything like that. city and team planning a parade later in the week. here are the fruits of that kind of win. huge party. fans jammed the streets this time, miami. a half million people, all of them there to cheer on the nba champions, the heat. some of the players including cigar-chomping lebron james, cooled off the crowd with squirt guns filled with water. after the parade, the team hosted a rally at their arena to show off their new trophy. that trophy has been kissed so
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many darn times. and now to wimbledon. a stunning loss for rafael nadal in round ones. >> yes, some say one of wimbledon's greatest upsets, steve darcis of belgium, ranked 135th, beat nadal in straight sets. nadal had been side lined with a knee injury. that was the end of a 22-match winning streak. >> i tried my best out there in every moment. it was not possible for me. this afternoon. and i had my chances. i didn't make it. >> now onto the ladies' side, serena williams plays tuesday. she will face luxembourg's opponent. williams says she is not familiar with her opponent's play but will enjoy the competition. williams has lost in round one of the grand slam before at 2012 french open. >> making all kinds of headlines off the court, the little spat going on between williams and sharapova, taking shots at each other.
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>> it will be interesting to see. the next time they do face each other. williams is going to let sharapova have it. >> you never know. still ahead, getting ready to hit the road with little ones for summer vacation, we have things you need to see. >> the latest
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hd-3 hd-3 ♪ ♪ it is an annual summer tradition, loading up the kids, taking a road trip, but sometimes being cooped up in the car for hours can make kids pretty miserable. our toy insider mom laurie shau schact is here. with some ideas to make it more pleasant.
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wouldn't that be nice. i know. i came from a family of seven kids packed into the station wagon. we got the classic -- "if i have to pull over" and "are we there yet? >> a great thing to take a family trip. needs to be thought going into it first. makes it easier like when you are sleeping some place new in the evening. for some kids the environment change is a little tough. so the first thing is called twinkles to go. >> twinkles to go. >> a little octopus. it is adorable. lights up, blue/green. you see fish and stars all around the room. just very soothing and sweet for kids. >> brings familiarity to a strange room. >> exactly. makes it easy to fall asleep. i bet when you got in the car, the minute you got in everyone was hungry. everyone was thirsty. >> and, of course, we all had to go to the bathroom. >> this is our cargo case. this is a snap case. a different compartment. >> yeah, sure. >> once you close it, it is airtight. everything stays fresh. it has a handle. let our kids carry some of their own things. and great monster cups where the handle is built in. we have sippy cups, take the
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handles off as kids get older. they're all leak resistant. >> plastic, the kind of plastics that are safe. >> they're safe for the kids. they have covers. they're all dishwasher top safe. >> perfect. >> hopefully your parents, told all of you to grab a backpack, or something, and pack things that are special to you. i found that worked great with my kids. >> i like the dinosaur. would have been nice. >> look at this dinosaur backpack. this opens up. this one becomes a playmate -- play mat for the kids. >> yeah, sure. what i love is i would say to my kids. okay, "make sure you have crayons. make sure you have paper." bring the things that are important. it makes them feel independent, they can carry it themselves. the straps on the back so when it's your turn, it's easy to throw on your back. >> a really great idea. >> we do need things that are soothing. i love this, bunnies by the bay. >> does look soothing. look at this thing. >> peanut, buddy blanket. emmy buddy blanket. so they just really -- >> blue one for a dude? >> could be for a boy or girl. >> doesn't matter anymore. >> they're wonderful for girls and boys.
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it's also the kind of thing they'll take and cherish no matter how old they get. games, great to bring games on the road. should be portable, small, easy to carry and be able to get stored again in whatever packaging to make it simple so you don't lose the pieces. think when you are in a restaurant waiting for the food. what a great time to pull out a game. >> no doubt. >> okay? so we have pairs aes and pairs. this is great, it is good for younger and older kids. they'll find letters, match up letters and words. older kids will have building word races. becomes a challenge and much harder. left center right is a classic game. it is so easy to pack. look how little it is. so it is all about throwing the the dice, the chips, and moving senn termination left, or right. whoever has the most chips the end of the game wins the game. >> can the whole family play the game? >> the whole family can play the game. >> good thing. >> we also have kids who love to have their baby with them, madam alexander, beautiful. she's from the baby cuddles
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line. she has sleepy eyes and a really soft body. her eyes will go to sleep. >> the eyes close. got you. >> one of the things kids want to bring with them. of course, they want to carry their baby like mom and dad. we have the carrier. this is by ka role. this will fit a 14-inch to 17-inch doll. we have all been with the kids when they have their devices. >> all about devices. in this day and age. yes, no doubt. >> music, games, movies. we don't always want to hear what they're listening to. so this from jazz first. they make great headsets and earplugs. and we have our star wars, we have our lala-loopsy. what i love about them, besides the fact that they're pretty and soft, there's a volume on it, so they're safe for kids' ears. they can't blast their ears out. >> and the fact that they look whimsical, fun, young they work well they're tough and all those things? >> they work. they're great. >> great to have.
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lori, excellent ideas. appreciate it. thanks to toy insider mom, lori schacht. visit wnnfans.com for all details on these toys. you're watching "world news now." ♪ places that i've never been ♪ seeing things i may never see again i can't wait to get on the road again ♪
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so i know how important that is. ♪ ♪ you know you want it ♪ all right. so if you love sugar as much as some people around here, then you already know twinkies are making a comeback. >> yes. kabc's rob hayes tells us anticipation is making hostess fans very happy. >> reporter: when hostess went bankrupt last year and twinkies disappeared sugary snack fans around the world were stunned. >> i was actually pregnant. i was devastated. >> reporter: for months americans have been rudderless drifting aimlessly in a sea of greek yogurt and other healthy snacks. >> oh, man. it was just like i had lost
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something, you know. i'd lost my girl, you know? i love twinkies. >> reporter: but now twinkies are on the comeback trail. >> wait, they're coming back? >> reporter: yep. hostess bought out by two investment firms says twinkies will reclaim its snack cake throne returning to store shelves july 15th. >> the kids will get to have fried twinkies and scoop the middle out of hostess ding dongs. >> what about hostess cupcakes? >> reporter: they're coming back as well along with hostess snackcakes. the company website counting done to the yellow spongy d-day. company officials issued this written statement, quote, america wanted hostess back, they wanted the original. a comeback by any other name would never be as sweet." >> the brand has a lot of strength. they knew that. that's why somebody paid $410 million for brand identity. >> reporter: ira kale is a professor of market usc.
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he says the new hostess is a more streamlined company with lower expenses and better distribution plan. one that will place the cream-filled tubular cakes in three times as many places. >> they're going to reach about 100,000 more stores than they used, to and apparently they're going to be selling it for the same price as they did before, which is $3.99 for a box of ten. >> reporter: that is 1,500 calories worth of confectionary americana per box headed to a store near you. don't walk, run. on july 15th. >> that's when i will be eating them. >> reporter: rob hayes reporting for abc news. >> did you see that one dude? he had ten boxes. >> he couldn't wait. >> some people love them so much. happy halloween, diana. a good costume you have got there. >> that's what i will be wearing this halloween. >> you look serious. >> i know. i'm very serious in my twinkie costume. you have to take me serious in the costume. i have to tell you look i said yesterday. i prefer the twinkie of the back in the day kind. >> with the trans fat. >> when it tasted like good old-fashioned grease, bad for you fat. clog your arteries kind of deal.
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now" -- explosive testimony. the george zimmerman trial near orlando. the this morning. explosive testimony. the george zimmerman trial near orlando. the four-letter word from a prosecutor that opened the case. >> [ bleep ], these [ bleep ] they always get away. >> jaw-dropping moves by both sides that led some legal insiders shaking their heads. >> international intrigue -- edward snowden's sneaky trip out of hong kong and growing anger from the u.s. why the obama administration is fuming. and the new security concerns surrounding this scandal. and road rage. the anger behind the wheel. what sets off so many drivers? the risks for you and your family. [ bleep ], [ bleep ]. come on! let's go! >> hey, hey, hey. >> wow, what should you do if an
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out-of-control driver like that guy confronts you? stay tuned for expert advice. it's tuesday, june 25th. >> announcer: from abc news, this is "world news now" with john muller and diana perez. that is some video of that road rage. my goodness. >> just watching it what did you say? >> i feel for the poor guy who's sitting in there. i kind of want to jump out of the car and let that guy have it, which is terrible. it's exactly the wrong emotion you should have. >> did you see the guy in the car though? >> open the door. >> the guy in the car never moved a muscle. >> never moved. well, that would actually make me more mad if the guy wouldn't dignify the rage. >> the guy on the opposite side was yelling so hard at the windshield. hilarious. >> should we begin with our news? >> let's begin. a highly unusual opening statement in the emotionally charged trial of gunman george zimmerman. >> one lawyer began with a string of expletives. another told jurors a knock-knock joke.
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matt gutman reports from the courthouse in stanford. >> reporter: these jars words. >> [ bleep ], these [ bleep ], they always get away. >> reporter: the first ones uttered in george zimmerman's second-degree murder trial, zimmerman's call to a police dispatcher. >> those were the words in that grown man's mouth as he followed in the dark a 17-year-old boy who he didn't know. >> reporter: the prosecution's tugging at the heartstrings of the six-person jury. all women. >> george zimmerman did not shoot trayvon martin because he had to. he shot him for the worst of all reasons, because he wanted to. >> reporter: the defense's don west also tried to draw in those six women with a joke. >> knock-knock. who's there? george zimmerman. george zimmerman who? all right, good. you're on the jury. >> reporter: a joke in reference
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to the difficulty in finding an unbiased juror in this case. but not a single juror laughed. look closely. even the lead prosecutor mystified. zimmerman told investigators he first spotted the 17-year-old walking through his development. then he says he lost sight of the teen. we now know zimmerman seemed to look for martin and encountered him along this area. they moved along the pathway and around this corner where zimmerman day later re-enacted what he says happened. a life-and-death struggle playing out in this 911 tape. >> so you think he's yelling help? >> yes. >> george zimmerman was crying out for help, and no one helped. >> reporter: i was there in court as that 911 tape was played. trayvon martin's mother who says that is her son screaming had to leave the court. she was visibly shaken. it's going to get harder on her. the man who shot her son is slated to take the stand. matt gutman, abc news, sanford,
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florida. now, to the widening irs scandal. newly released documents show liberal groups were targeted for higher scrutiny and conservative organizations. and those documents appear to back up the irs claim that the practice to single out groups was not politically motivated. the acting irs commissioner also revealed the lists created to flag certain groups were still being used until just two weeks ago. the sweeping immigration bill offering a path to citizenship for millions of undocumented immigrants is a step closer to reality. part of the historic bipartisan passed a hurdle in the senate with 67 votes. it would provide nearly $40 billion to border security over the next decade. the complete bill could get senate approval before the july fourth recess but faces a tough fight in the house. all right. there's an urgent mystery this morning over the whereabouts of edward snowden. >> sources tell abc news there is growing consensus within top circles that snowden is in a position to deal a bloel to u.s. national security.
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abc's tahman bradley has the very latest. good morning, tahman. >> reporter: diana, john. good morning. the obama administration is demanding russian officials turn over snowden. fbi director mueller in touch with russian officials so far no sign that moscow will help. edward snowden is believed to still be in russia after he did not board a flight from moscow to havana. the obama administration is urging the russians to expel him. >> we're following all the appropriate legal channels and working with various other countries to make sure that rule of law is observed. >> reporter: it's now believed that snowden is trying to seek asylum in ecuador, but the u.s. government is warning latin american countries not to allow snowden or allow him to pass through other destinations. the white house is not happy about hong kong letting snowden leave. >> this was a deliberate choice by the government to release a fugitive despite a valid arrest warrant. and that decision unquestionably has a negative impact on the
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u.s./china relationship. >> reporter: snowden has been receiving travel and legal advice from wikileaks. its founder julian assange, says the anti-secrecy group paid for snowden's flight from hong kong to russia. >> edward snowden is not a traitor, he is not a spy. he is a whistleblower who has told the public an important truth. >> reporter: snowden charged with theft and espionage is believed to be carrying four laptop computers reportedly filled with u.s. government secrets. >> i had access to, you know, the full rosters of everyone working at the nsa, the entire intelligence community and undercover assets all around the world. >> reporter: snowden's u.s. passport has been revoked. julian assange says that the government of ecuador provided snowden with refugee travel documents. john and diana? >> tahman bradley, thank you. the former premier of italy is nation seven years in prison for paying underaged prostitutes for sex and then trying to cover
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it up. lawyers say they will appeal the send sense even longer than prosecutors requested. some strong word coming from an attorney for new england patriots' tight end aaron hernandez as his client remains under investigation in connection with a murder case. he says hernandez has been the subject of a relentless flood of rumors and false media reports and he claims an arrest warrant has not been issued for hernandez. detectives searched a pond near hernandez's home yesterday as they continue investigating the death of a 27-year-old semipro football player. and basketball hall of famer scottie pippen has been questioned by police in southern california about a fight over the weekend. the victim is in the hospital with a head injury. and its unclear whether pippen will be charged. kabc's john har tongue has the latest. >> reporter: former nba great scottie pippen moved quickly and quietly leaving the sheriff's station and jumping into an suv. pippen was involved in an altercation with another man outside nobu restaurant in malibu. >> i believe the altercation started over photographs or
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an autograph. i don't at this point have all of the details. i don't think it was quite as simple as asking for an autograph. >> reporter: the other man involved was sent to the hospital but released. the man was punched. kicked, knocked unconscious and injuries to his head and back along with some broken teeth. >> in this type of investigation, there are also conflicting statements and stories. that's why we have a few more witnesses, independent witnesses we would like to interview. he was released, but we are going to interview him in the next day or two. we'll get the full extent of his injuries. and again, how those injuries occurred. which, you know is always somewhat up for debate. >> reporter: investigators say the 47-year-old pippen was in town from chicago and just finished dinner at nobu with his wife, children, and in-laws. the six-time champion with the chicago bulls and hall of famer was named a suspect, faced possible felony assault with a deadly weapon charge.
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but after talking to investigators for about an hour, he was not arrested or boxed on any charges. >> that was the original charge on the report at the time. there was not a weapon involved, but as you know, hands or feet can also be a weapon. >> john hartung reporting from l.a. there. >> what do you think? the victim was intoxicated. followed him into the parking lot. took more pictures. >> scotty and his family. >> with your family. extra uptight. >> your kids. wife. >> you can't go around beating people up. >> right. that's the allegation. we don't know if it's actually true or not. >> and it's so tough. if somebody's annoying you, can you call the police for somebody annoying you? for being a jerk? you really can't. >> if you claim the paparazzi, if you pull the paparazzi card say this is my right to take pictures of other people. then you really are stuck in a bind. by the way, if he is charged -- and like i said, unclear if he will be charged. if he is charged, here we go, it
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would be assault with intent to commit great bodily harm. >> there you go. >> that's a serious charge. >> no doubt. >> the claim is the guy had his head bashed on the concrete. he was bleeding. he needed stitches. so a big deal here. so moving on to a miraculous game, the stanley cup playoffs. late in the third period. chicago scored to tie the game up. >> and then just 17 seconds later the blackhawks scored again and held on to win 3rks-2. that means the stanley cup is theirs for the second time in four seasons. >> thousands of blackhawks fans poured into the streets of chicago to celebrate. they'll want a chance to honor their team with a public celebration later in the week. >> wow. >> i was so into hockey as a kid, i'm telling you what. bruins/blackhawks. classic stuff. >> boston deserved the win. >> chicago won. the chicago is the blackhawks. >> boston deserved the win. >> there you go. boston deserved the win? >> they deserved the win.
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>> oh. >> they were close. they were there. could you imagine? they were going to win. they were right there. >> you're right about that. >> sorry, chicago, but boston deserved that one. coming up -- trendy food trucks. you see them everywhere. they're not just for people anymore. >> shopping for a baby with royal flair, duchess catherine hitting the stores before her big due date. the world watches her every move. you are watching "world news now." ♪ baby baby baby ooh ♪ thought you'd always be mine mine ♪ >> announcer: "world news now" weather brought to you by hotwire.com. a relalaxing trip to florida... you knknow, just to unwind. but we can only afford e trip this year, and his high school reunion is coming up in seattle. evereryone's going. we couould actually affordto ta. see, when really nice hotel, so we gogot our four-star hotels for r half price. i shouldld have been voted st likely to travel. ♪ h-o-t-w-i-r-e... ♪ hotwire.com
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>> that's awesome. >> our poor director -- all right. we've all felt a burst of anger at another driver cutting us off on the highway. >> yes, we sure have. but more and more, those angry moments are becoming violent. road rage is definitely on the raise. abc's gio benitez looks at how to avoid a high-speed confrontation. >> run me off the road! >> reporter: a fight that end with gunshots all because this man driving his family on the north carolina road says two young men cut him off, an extreme example of road rage. and just last week, a bruising
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brawl at a california intersection between a lawyer and a retired police officer. aggressive drivers are a growing threat on the roads. in fact, the most recent study from the u.s. department of transportation attributes more than a thousand deaths to road rage, up 170%. let's go for a ride, doctor. psychologist dr. ryan fuller says cars become weapons in the hands of stressed drivers. what's the mindset of someone who's just really angry on the road? >> now they perceive someone cutting them off just gone one step too far. >> reporter: watch this just days ago. a driver on a los angeles highway cut off another driver. threw a can at him, and got out of his car to yell. so what do you do if attacked? dr. fuller says, first, keep your cool. >> you want to take a few deep breaths. slow things down. >> reporter: most importantly he says, don't make eye contact because that can be interpreted as a challenge. >> reporter: sometimes we have seen people get out of the car and start yelling. is that something they should do? >> best thing they can do is
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stay in their car under any circumstances. [ bleep ], [ bleep ]. >> reporter: like this man ignoring the angry marine ranting outside his window. just keeping his eye on the road. >> whoa, whoa. >> reporter: ji o'benitez, abc news, new york. >> turned into an animal. >> hard to watch that. >> ah! >> my goodness. you want to play that back and say you look like an idiot. calm down. >> i run hot though. i totally understand. >> that's it! >> ah! i get it. >> me too, i get it. i don't think i have ever kicked anybody's door though. >> yeah, you don't do that. up next, the style fit for a royal. >> duchess kate busy buying cute little things for her new baby. we're going to show you what the heir to the british thorn -- throne will find in his or her nursery. and coming up in our next half hour, sneaking out of the zoo, the all-points-bulletin for a red panda.
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why this wild search is our "f
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♪ baby when you have a baby, the only thing more fun than buying teeny-weeny baby clothes is decorating the nursery. >> that's what duchess kate has been spending the final weeks of her presidency -- presidency. i have a tickle in my throat -- pregnancy doing. abc's amy robach tells us why the stylish kate is setting some new trends. >> reporter: while dad-to-be prince william spent the weekend attending a wedding with his brother harry, his wife, kate, eighth months' pregnant, was at home getting ready for the birth of the latest heir to the throne
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due in july. she made her last prebaby presence last saturday. many wonder what the littlest royal's nursery will look like. >> kate's decorating style is actually very similar to her dressing style. she likes very classic, very clean lines, very simple things, very elegant. >> reporter: kate is reportedly preparing two nurseries, one at kensington palace and another at her parents' estate in the small english community of buckleberry where the duchess is expected to spend time with her mom carol following the baby's birth. the items will include a moses basket for the baby, similar to this one, retailing for $500. kate and her mother were seen loading one into a car. and kate has been seen shopping at chic london boutiques for throw pillows, rugs, and drapes in herringbone brown. while purchasing upscale items don't expect her to go crazy investing in ostentatious baby blink on the market like this
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swar of ski crystal cup. >> we know she haggled for antiques and visits outlet store. >> reporter: a modern investment, a buggy. this bugaboo chameleon stroller with blue with stylish stripes, considered a unisex design perfect for kate who opted not to find out the baby gender in advance. managers at giggle, the baby store to the stars, say they expect what they're now calling the kate stroller to sell out quickly. >> the products she picks, the colors for the nursery will be hot ticket items. >> reporter: moms we spoke with agree. >> she's got fantastic taste. she's dressed so well throughout the pregnancy. >> i think everybody will, you know, just be looking to see what this baby is going to get. i will for sure. >> reporter: amy robach, abc news, new york. >> can we talk how she is eight months' pregnant and looks like four months' pregnant. >> looks like a baby bump. doesn't look like boom, no. is it the clothing or not showing much? >> i don't know. she has the best stylist in the
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world if it is the clothing. she looks amazing. those nurseries will be amazing too. >> nothing wrong with looking big. big. a-- those nurseries will be amazing too. and remove some waste. ctually gels to trap and that gelling also helps to lower some cholesterol. it even traps some carbs to help maintain healthy blood sugar levels as part of your diet. now that's one super hard working fiber. metamucil. 3 amazing benefits in 1 super fiber. ♪
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welcome to "the mix," everybody. yesterday we were telling you about the stunt of a daredevil, nik wallenda walking across the grand canyon. today we're telling you about an incredible magic trick by illusionist dynamo from london. this guy levitated off of the ground. not just for a few seconds. check him out. there he is on the outside of a double-decker bus in london, nothing under his feet. all he's got to hold onto, the palm of his hand is on top of the bus as he gets a police escort through london. >> how is he doing that? >> he levitated next to the bus. he, there he was. >> that's a good illusion. it sure looks like he's floating. >> these incredible.
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he pretty much did float. he did this as he crossed the westminster bridge. he had a police escort. he's teamed up with pepsi. he now has a couple of pepsi ads. he has his own television show in london. you know, people get to see all kinds of fun stuff he does on the television show, but there were people on the bus who got to see it firsthand. they say it was one of those "had to see it to believe it" moments. nothing under his feet. no strings attached. no platform anywhere. just a really amazing illusionist. >> what's he doing? >> i don't know. >> i want to know the answer. food trucks all over new york city. love food trucks. a food truck now for dogs doing well in chicago. a bit of a trend. gourmet exotic food truck. fido to go. it is called. she opened this up. she has 40 applicants who want to license the brand. she makes cookies and frozen yogurt cups that she sells in her commercial kitchen in downtown chicago. she has to explain to a lot of people who want to buy a frozen
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owe dpurt for themselves that it's not sweetened and i've got a hunch you're not going to like it. it is for your dog. there you go. pretty cool. >> cute. >> ridiculous. >> fido. >> it pleases me so much to see my dog eating something he loves. >> so cool. now to boulder. there has been a kidnapping. a stuffed bear was kidnapped from outside a store. he was taken to a nearby camp site and then gifted to another set of campers. well, police on the hunt for the guy checked out craigslist, found out somebody posted him on craigslist. contacted the guys. went out and reached out to them. and they got the bear back. the winner here, though, is the official police report, which says the bear does not appear to have been injured, although he was missing his fishing vest when police found him. the bear has not shared
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this morning on "world news now" -- spy drama. the american accused of exposing american secrets who spent another night in russia. what's next for edward snowden who tried to flee justice. and adding up, the powerful storms, floods, and fires, the cost of all this damage and why it's expected to get so much worse, leaving destruction across a wide area of the country. sneaking out. the red began that escaped from the national zoo, the search, how social media got involved, and who found this clever little animal. and in stitches. jimmy kimmel's injury and explanation leaves his late night talk show audience laughing with him. that's coming up in "the skinny" on this tuesday, june 25th. >> announcer: from abc news, this is "world news now" with john muller and diana perez. all right. we begin this half hour with the
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increasingly urgent search for edward snowden. sources tell abc news that there is growing consensus that snowden is in a position to deal a potentially devastating blow to u.s. national security. >> but where is he? with the latest on the deepening mystery, here's our scheef investigative correspondent brian ross. >> reporter: high drama and international intrigue at the moscow airport, reminiscent of a cold war spy novel. at the center of it all, 30-year-old edward snowden, a contract employee at the cia and nsa, national security agency. under indictment for espionage. and on the run from the fbi, with four laptops loaded with america's most sensitive secrets. russia is refusing to arrest snowden. >> it would be very disappointing if he was willfully allowed to board an airplane as a result, and there would be, without any question, some effect, impact on the relationship and consequences. >> reporter: snowden had been scheduled to fly to havana on
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flight 150 of the russian airline aeroflot. his assigned seat in economy class, 17-a, was empty as the plane pulled away from the gate after he checked in. snowden is trying to make his way from russia to cuba and then to ecuador for political asylum. countries only too happy to defy the u.s. ecuador's embassy in london already serves as a safe haven for another u.s. target. wikileaks founder julian assange who by phone said his group helped arrange snowden's escape. >> edward snowden is not a traitor, he's not a spy. >> reporter: snowden was able to flee his hideout in hong kong after a final dinner of pizza and fried chicken because of help from officials there who first delayed acting on the formal u.s. request for his arrest, claiming the paperwork was not in order and then failed to tell american officials that snowden was on the move. >> then he will be given free passage, okay?
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an uninterrupted passage via the airport to any other place of his choice. >> reporter: snowden was able to fly out of hong kong for moscow though his passport had been revoked by the u.s. the day before. officials in hong kong say washington failed to revoke snowden's passport in time coming eight days after criminal charges were filed. at the white house, press secretary jay carney said the u.s. is not buying that excuse. brian ross, abc news, new york. more witnesses are expected to testify this morning after explosive opening statements in the george zimmerman trial. the former neighborhood watch volunteer is accused of shooting unarmed teenager trayvon martin in sanford, florida. the first words jurors heard from the prosecutor were quoting zimmerman's call to 911. >> [ bleep ] punks, these [ bleep ] they always get away. those were the words in that grown man's mouth as he followed
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in the dark a 17-year-old boy who he didn't know. >> among the first witnesses to be called was the emergency dispatcher who took that call from zimmerman. this is an emotional trial. i mean trayvon martin's mom walked out during that 911 call. and it's only expected to get worse for her because while the prosecution is saying that it's zimmerman screaming -- or the defense is saying zimmerman is the screaming for help in the 911 call. the prosecution is saying that's trayvon martin screaming for his life. >> they'll let the jury decide for themselves. not going to allow voice analysts comment on that. very interesting in the opening statements. just, you know. >> bizarre. >> bizarre in both cases. clearly the defense's opening statement with the knock-knock joke just did not go over. >> really didn't. the knock-knock joke in case you haven't heard was knock-knock, who is there, george zimmerman, george zimmerman who?
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that's why you're on the jury. >> everybody, the six women sitting on the jury. >> saying you are on the jury you don't know who george zimmerman is, and that's why we want you on a jury. that's just a bizarre way to open any kind of -- >> if you are trying to bond -- >> that's right. that's what the opening statement is, trying to bond. create a timeline, what we will do, what we will show you, the evidence to prove to you, we are right, they're wrong. not the way to do that. you don't start with a joke. so we'll see. it's just the beginning. >> yes, you're right. all right. let's talk about two coal miners who were injured. they had to be rescued after an underground collapse in western pennsylvania. the workers hit by a section of rock that fell off from a ceiling on the mine about 400 feet down. this all took place. emergency crews took about an hour to bring the miners to the surface. they were both alert and conscious. they're expected to be okay. well, there's more of a tragic end there to a grain elevator accident in indiana. a worker killed when the elevator exploded about 50 miles southeast of chicago. the blast so powerful it shook homes nearby. the man was believed to be loading grain from the top of
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the elevator when the explosion knocked him off the edge. investigators still trying to determine the cause. how about this? a massachusetts family shaken up but okay after a bus crashes into the kitchen of their home. the impact knocked that house seven feet off of its foundation. >> wow. >> the bus driver was seriously injured in the accident. he was trapped for more than an hour. police in auburn speculate he may have had a medical problem which caused him to lose control of the bus. and it wasn't the greatest start to what was supposed to be a flight from reagan national airport outside washington to minneapolis. the delta jet veered off the runway and got stuck in a foot of mud. 160 passengers were safely taken off the plane. buses then took them back to the tell nal and another flight where they were able to board hours later. a major thunderstorm in central new hampshire sparked a lightning strike on a boy scout camp, sending two dozen scouts to the hospital. no one was hit directly by the lightning. paramedics say everyone was taking shelter under a canopy which was hit by the bolt of lightning traveling along a
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piece of metal. 23 scouts, three adults hospitalized. none of the burns were life-threatening. lightning also being blamed for sparking a growing wildfire burning in colorado. we have been reporting on the wild weather across the nation for weeks. and as abc's clayton sandell reports, it has been a costly year when it comes to damage done by acts of nature. >> reporter: this tornado spotted near dix, nebraska, just part of a weather juggernaut in the plains and midwest. in minnesota, 50 mile an hour wind flipped big rigs and were powerful enough to destroy a trailer in south dakota, killing a woman inside. in boscoville, wisconsin, 8 inches of rain flooded half the town as wildfires continue ravaging the west. there is not enough rain. thousands of firefighters plus a fleet of aircraft adding to the growing cost of weather disasters. in 1980, $58 billion. by last year, extreme weather climate costs nearly doubled to $110 billion. 377 people were killed. hurricane sandy's tab, $65 billion. drought and heat waves, another $30 billion.
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the cost of fighting the black forest fire here in colorado has already topped $10 million. and that doesn't even count more than 500 homes that burned to the ground. scientists say human caused climate change is already helping shift the planet's natural balance, creating more heat waves, drought, and intense downpours. a stormy and expensive reality that's already on our doorstops. clayton sandell, abc news, colorado springs. checking the weather maps now, it looks like a lot of yesterday actually to be honest. more storms from the northern plains to the midwest and great lakes region. rain for parts of the northeast. afternoon thunderstorms from the deep south off to the mid-atlantic. showers in the pacific northwest. >> upper 60s, mid-70s along the west coast. it will be 88 degrees in miami, atlanta, and chicago. some nice weather to recover from the stanley cup celebration. all right. we have some congratulations to hand out this morning all because of this. hang on. pretty cool.
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that is a small rocket built by three students from georgetown, texas. the flight took part as a competition in the annual air show in paris, france. >> inside that rocket was a raw egg. now, the idea behind this competition was to have the rocket soar 750 feet into the air and then float back to the ground, all of this without the egg being damaged. well, that's exactly what happened, which was enough for kids from texas to win the entire competition. congratulations to them. >> pretty amazing. that is a soft little landing. isn't it? >> that is. now i want to say their names because it's pretty cool. brothers mark and matthew janecka and daniel kelton, are the ones responsible for the rocket who won. i remember -- [ rocket whistling ] >> no kaboom. there's no kaboom necessary because the egg made it all the way without kabooming. when i was a sophomore in high school, we had to be responsible for an egg. it was our child for all of a week. out of the, i don't know, 100
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kids, maybe two eggs survived. >> you had to care for an egg. >> i had to care for an egg. decorate it. make it like a child. we really thought it was a person. >> oh, interesting. >> yours broke? >> yes, halfway through. although my high school teacher doesn't know that. >> you're not going to share how it broke? you replaced it with another egg? wow. wow, perez, that is sneaky. >> it happens all the time. it has to happen all the time. i know i'm not the only one who did this. coming up, how jimmy kimmel got his audience laughing after a really painful injury. wait till you see this one. stacy keibler, sizzling good looks. can you look this hot by following her diet routine? we'll tell you all about it. you're watching "world news now." ing her diet routine? we'll tell you all about it. you're watching "world news now." ♪ doesn't mean i'm lonely when i'm alone ♪ ♪ doesn't mean i'm lonely when i'm alone ♪ ♪ what doesn't kill you makes you brighter ♪ >> announcer: "world news now" weather brought to you by colonial penn life insurance. colonial penn life insurance. >> announcer: "world news now" brought to you by colonial penn life insurance.
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♪ baby we were born to run a high-profile breakout in washington, d.c., had an entire neighborhood on the lookout. residents armed with their iphones. >> rare red panda, not the giant one, red panda escaped from the zoo. and spent the day on the lam. and that is why this is our "favorite story of the day." and thanks to social media he is back where he belongs. here's abc's david kerley. >> reporter: look fast and meet rusty, the fury fugitive which had the nation's capitol all before noon, the country's national zoo tweets out. we are looking for a missing red
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panda. wanted the less than-year-old red panda who arrived from a nebraska zoo and only one on display, three weeks ago. officials aren't sure if he was kidnapped or escaped. >> their inclination is to go up high into a tree. >> reporter: zoo officials thought rusty was still on zoo grounds. >> they're looking for him in the trees. >> good place to look. >> he is missing. is that what happened last night? >> yeah. >> reporter: with the search on. rusty becomes a social media darling. #rusty, #findrusty. >> do they look like pandas to you? >> no. they look like a red raccoon. >> reporter: smart kid. red pandas only share a name with the giant beganpandas, whie bears. red panda is related to raccoon, skunks, and weasels. less than two hours after the first tweet, look who is spotted in someone's yard with the tweet, red panda in our neighborhood. zoo workers rush to the scene and high fives as rusty is
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returned to captivity. and then in a secret service kind of way -- >> hey, guys, excuse us. >> reporter: -- he's whisked away. this must be washington. david kerley, abc news, washington. >> in a white unmarked van. >> the perfect name for rusty, don't you think? because of his color, he looks rusty. i happen to think he looks like a fox. >> looks foxy, raccoony, not panda-y. now we know. they're not bears. >> oh. here is something interesting for you all-knowing viewers, discovered in the late 1800s. >> by europeans. >> of course. >> i'm sure the people in the himalayas knew all about them for thousands of years, but they were discovered in the 1800s by europeans. >> that's when we figured them out. a full 50 years before the giant black-and-white pandas. >> i'm sure the chinese knew the giant black-and-white pandas lived in their area before europeans discovered it. >> i think you're right. >> i like how we take responsibility. well, they were discovered. they only came into existence in the early 1800s. >> exactly right. coming up -- separating fact from fiction. we're going to do that for you when it comes to kim kardashian
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and kanye west. and new theories about amy winehouse and her final days. that's next in "the skinny." >> announcer: "world news now"
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♪ skinny so skinny ♪ ♪ skinny so skinny ♪ all right. jimmy kimmel, sporting a big old shiner. >> it looked pretty bad. >> you'd almost think it was a joke it was so convincing looking, but it was very real. take a look. we'll show you a picture if we
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have it. is that it? >> you can barely see it. >> you can see it better when he does his stand-up act. apparently went out for food with his fiance. wasn't like he got in a fight. with a bikers' gang, or anything. went to pay a parking meter. opened the door on his face. he explained the whole thing. get a listen. >> i actually put together a re-enactment of this. i will show you what happened. i was going to open the door to get quarters out of the coin thing to feed the meter, but instead i got a little distracted and instead hit myself in the cheekbone with the corner of the door. i learned an important lesson. and that lesson is car doors open outwards. >> who knew? >> who knew? unless, of course, there is another story. that is just such a perfect black eye. i have to think, well. man, oh, man. >> somebody else would have the story. you know? if it is jimmy kimmel sporting a shiner and they're the one that gave it to them. i have a funny feeling there's
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another story out there, don't you think, if it really wasn't a car door? >> makes you wonder. i love it. he cast his own likeness with the buff body. that's great. when they make a movie about me, they'll never make, i want to have somebody who is -- >> buff. >> of course. >> buff. muscular. moving on, kimye, there are reports out there, and we should attribute this to britain's "sun." was picked up by "the daily beast." apparently kanye west popped the question to baby mama, kim kardashian. happened a couple days after they had their baby, north west. and the report goes on, this was with an engagement ring, rare black diamond, cost him $1 million. wow. but there is a lot of other reports out there that say that is simply not true. perez hilton, "people" magazine, both of them saying, nice try, likely story, just not a real story. >> here's a goofy question. is black diamond black or is it just called a black diamond? >> i don't know.
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no idea. >> didn't mean to put you on the spot. >> i don't know much about rare diamonds. i know the white pretty ones. >> i know they cost a lot. >> clear pretty ones. that's all i've got. amy winehouse, her brother claims she died not from drugs and alcohol. he believes in his heart that she died from bulimia. he says his sister was killed by bulimia. he says drug and alcohol abuse would have eventually killed his sister. she died in 2011, of course. he says the eating disorder bulimia made her body weak and susceptible. all her friends were doing it. they stopped. amy never really stopped. >> she did get really thin. >> yeah. >> you know -- you know, he might have something there. >> bulimia. he admits that the drugs and alcohol would get her in the end. he thinks bulimia is what got her in the short run. >> 27-year-old. so incredibly talented. we're talking bieber in the news. he's been banned for life from las vegas indoor skydiving, bad behavior, and failure to pay. $1,600. they got there right before they closed. he was there with six other people. he said, hey, i'll pay you when
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we're done. never paid. had a bad attitude. the place said, never again. you are out. >> black diamond. in fact, they're black. >> this just in. it's happening now.
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so ditch your dishcloth and switch to new bounty duratowel. the durable, cloth-like picker-upper. >> announcer: yahoo! news together now with abc news it's time to see the whole picture. ♪ what doesn't kill you makes >> announcer: yahoo! news together now with abc news it's time to see the whole picture. ♪ what doesn't kill you makes you stronger stand a little taller ♪ ♪ doesn't mean i'm lonely so we all know this, especially on this shift, staying in shape is tough, really tough, especially for us. the most successful plans involve diet, exercise, and the ever elusive sleep. >> what are those three things -- diet, exercise, sleep. >> i never heard of them. >> one famous face going further there. george clooney's gorgeous girlfriend stacy keibler revealing her fitness regime.
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linzie janis tells us what it is about. >> reporter: she is famous for her skyscraper legs, her dance moves, and her beau, george clooney. and now stacy keibler is sharing the secrets behind that fabulous figure. >> i believe you are what you eat, so i try to eat a lot of organic vegetables and fruits. >> reporter: the former "dancing with the stars" contestant is negazit inside she's revealing her health regime and a super strict diet called the clean cleanse, i thy cly life changed when i i eliminated sugar, fruit, beans, corn, and gluten and looked at it like an experiment with my body. >> reporter: it rea >> it is absolutely extreme. i do really like she has dramatically reduced the amount of sugar in her overall diet and taken out all packaged processed >> reut w into keibler's glamoro >> my fitness tip is to try to
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sweat every single day. ♪ we see >> reporter: the key to keeping the never ending legs red carpet ready, cellulite-busting body brushing. >> i just started getting into lymphatic brushing really great to get your cells moving, and lymphatic system moving. you've will see a difference. >> reporter: stacy is just open. she really is a likeable, warm, genuine person. >> reporter: top tips fr beauty who's managed to snag one of hollywood's hottest and most elusi elusive bachelors. linzie janis, abc news, new york. >> or you could just be, be like diana perez and do nothing and eat turnovers and cinnabons and god know as what you eat every day and not gain a pound. >> it's going to catch up with me. i know it is. >> it should have caught up with you by now. >> it should have caught up with you by now. >> k atney. free.y.
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♪ in moments of grief, we are there. when the world looks for truth, broadcasters come through -- se fails. today, with more ways than ever to experience the moments that transform our lives, americans still choose broadcast television and radio more than all other media combined. television and radio are still the most trusted sources for news and entertainment, and our web and social sites are among the most visited sites in our daily lives. when important moments happen, both big and small, we're the first informers to history. we are the pioneers, the innovators, the local broadcasters of radio and television.
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this morning, the world's most wanted man. >> how long can edward snowden stay out of the spotlight? will he make a run for it today? new details and a live report. weather danger. dozens injured by a severe lightning strike overnight, as floodwaters rise across the midwest. plus this -- >> [ bleep ] punk. these [ bleep ], they always get away. >> jaw-dropping moves and courtroom drama as the george zimmerman trial opens in florida. and jimmy kimmel debuts a new look. nursing a serious injury to his face. we're going to let him explain just what went wrong. and good tuesday morning. there's new urgency in the

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